The tangled mass of shin-deep, sprawling stems of Crown Vetch spreads up to three feet around and over other vegetation. This invasive plant spreads by rhizomes and can blanket meadows and open hillsides to the exclusion of other flowers. As a legume, it fixes nitrogen in the soil, which can stimulate the growth of weedy invasives that can out-compete native species. Note the spherical cluster of pinkish-white, bilaterally symmetrical flowers.

SIMILAR SPECIES: The sprawling, prostrate stems and dense flower head distinguish this plant. Covers, Trifolium species, have similar flower clusters but only three leaflets. American vetch, Vicia americana, has flowers in rows and opposite even-pinnately leaflets.